Lost Clothing Lost Enterprises Lost T-Shirts Lost Tanks Lost Hats Lost Boardshorts - Tillys.com

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Lost Enterprises Background: Lost began in 1985 when Matt Biolos and a bunch of school friends were into snowboarding at Mt. Baldy skateboarding at the Pipeline in Upland and surfing in Dana Point. They weren't too worried about winning this football game or that contest. They were "team lost". Thus the name ô...lostö scribbled on books t-shirts benches tables and eventually clothing.

Matt Biolos began sanding surfboards at Surfglas and Herbie Fletcher Surf Shop fresh out of high school in 1987. He made his first surfboard at this time and called it a ôRatz Assö like in ôI donÆt give a .....ö. His second surfboard was labeled ômayhemö- obviously not taking things very seriously. (Mayhem Ordinance was Matt's high school music band). This name "Mayhem" for better or for worse stuck. Matt shaped 20 boards the first year. Not too many people were ordering boards from Matt yet so to make money he continued to sand surfboards and began to paint designs on them along with a handwritten LOST wherever he could. Surfers like Christian Fletcher and Matt Archbold were getting BiolosÆ paint jobs. By working in an environment with master shapers (Timmy Patterson Jim Fuller Terry Senate Randy Sleigh to name a few) and good surfers he was able to develop as a shaper.

Matt's friends had been telling him for years to put the word Lost and his art on tees and try to sell them. By 1992 fueled in part by a suggestions from Timmy Patterson and Johnny Monson Matt began putting his art on T-Shirts with a LOST logo. His roommate Mike Reola a recent business school graduate helped him handle the business side of things and they both worked on developing a plan to slowly grow and market the company with little or no money. This included help from numerous friends in the form of small loans work in exchange for a couch to stay on a parent's back yard to dye tee shirts or a vehicle in exchange for rent. Some of these people (although not a complete list by any means) were Aaron Strand Chad Godett Max McGhee Joe Rich Jason Kenworthy Ryan Divel Jimmy Nudo Matt Reola Bill Woodcock Tonan Ramos and PR Paul Berton Matt "Chicken" Willey Bill VanDenBerg and Kawika Urso.

At this time Matt was producing about 500 Mayhem Surfboards a year and had guys like Strider Wasilewski and Christian Fletcher riding them. In 1993 Lost made its first video titled ôMomentum 3ö which showcased the fledgling surf skate and snowboard teams along with everyone who lived at the ôLost Houseö. The video was renamed ôDysfunctionalö after almost being sued by Taylor Steele. The video was meant to be a joke and only for their friends but its popularity led them to produce their first real video titled ôWhatÆs Really GoinÆ Onö in 1995.

At the same time Mike and Matt were learning to make clothes. Neither had any experience whatsoever. (Matt had screen printed a few Lost and Mayhem tees in High School). After a few disappointing t-shirt runs with hand presses they walked into the monstrous Gotcha building (not knowing anyone) and Captain Jack Little offered to do the screen-printing BEFORE 6AM when the Gotcha stuff had to start. Next they figured out how to get patterns made samples made then find the best place to sew them up. Lost made trunks shorts pants hats jackets and light snowboard outerwear.

In 1996 Lawrance Quigley came to them and offered to head up the design and production of the clothing - except for the t-shirts. Squigs knew who was the best at making each piece and could get it done very quickly. The Lost clothing line went from 10 pieces to 30 pieces overnite.

Lost's first team rider was skateboarder Chad Shetler in 1993. The first pro Lost team rider was surfer Chris Ward in 1994 (Chris was 15!) closely followed by Justin Matteson. In 1996 when another clothing company came along and offered Chris Ward six figures to break his contract Lost surfboards was born. Lost was now Chris' surfboard sponsor. Today Lost continues to support skate and surf athletes and events as well as snowboarding and other sports. Chad Shetler runs the skate program and Matt and Mike while running the company with partner Joel Cooper continue to oversee all marketing and product. Chris Ward is making his inaugural run of the WCT Tour for 2005.

The original Lost house had the original Lost ramp out back and Lost Enterprises was operated out of the living room. This lasted until the house was condemned in 1996. The old Dewey's TV warehouse in downtown San Clemente became the new Lost clothing warehouse and headquarters (Lost surfboards still operates out of this building). The clothing company outgrew two more warehouses and now is located at the Irvine Spectrum complete with a Jack Murphy designed vert ramp 40Æ wide with 10Æ8ö transitions with 2 feet of vert.

We could say "Since those wild beginnings Lost has spread slowly across the world. The Company has matured internally but continues to run off the same philosophy it started with. The Lost thinking now flows through its art music films athletes and clothingà" ...but that sounds like some PR firm wrote that for us. So Lost is whatever you think it is...